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Anderson, IC; Bastias, BA; Genney, DR; Parkin, PI; Cairney, JWG. 2007. Basidiomycete fungal communities in Australian sclerophyll forest soil are altered by repeated prescribed burning. MYCOLOGICAL RESEARCH. 111(4):482-486.
Address:
Anderson, IC, Macaulay Land Use Res Inst, Aberdeen AB15 8QH, Scotland
Soil basidiomycetes play key roles in forest nutrient and carbon
cycling processes, yet the diversity and structure of below ground
basidiomycete communities remain poorly understood. Prescribed burning
is a commonly used forest management practice and there is evidence
that single fire events can have an impact on soil fungal communities
but little is known about the effects of repeated prescribed burning.
We have used internal transcribed spacer (ITS) terminal restriction
fragment length polymorphism (T-RFLP) analysis to investigate the
impacts of repeated prescribed burning every two or four years over a
period of 30 years on soil basidiomycete communities in an Australian
wet sclerophyll forest. Detrended correspondence analysis of ITST-RFLP
profiles separated basidiomycete communities in unburned control plots
from those in burned plots, with those burned every two years being the
most different from controls. Burning had no effect on basidiomycete
species richness, thus these differences appear to be due to changes in
community structure. Basidiomycete communities in the unburned control
plots were vertically stratified in the upper 20 cm of soil, but no
evidence was found for stratification in the burned plots, suggesting
that repeated prescribed burning results in more uniform basidiomycete
communities. Overall, the results demonstrate that repeated prescribed
burning alters soil basidiomycete communities, with the effect being
greater with more frequent burning.
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